Election Season: Listen, Discuss, Vote

There is a definite nip in the air, and each day the sun seems just a little more apathetic as it makes its way over the Connecticut River Valley. Fall is here. So are political elections, and the air has been ringing with the sounds of…nastiness. As the Wesleyan Media Project has shown, both sides are playing the negative game. Here in Connecticut, we are treated every day to a barrage of negative advertising in a Senate race pitting a very rich wrestling magnate against a congressman trying to replace Joe Lieberman. Watching this slug-fest is even less entertaining than watching pseudo-wrestling. We’ve all seen fakery before, and so it’s easy to become cynical about the mudslinging.

It’s easy to become cynical about the political process, too, but that would be a big mistake. This election offers some of the starkest choices that American voters have been faced with in generations. This is a time for students to make their voices heard – whomever you are supporting in November. Wesleyan students have a long history of civic engagement – I saw that first-hand when I met with a large group of concerned students last week to talk about financial aid. You can see a video of the forum here. Public support for education in general and student aid in particular are very much in play in this election – and of course that’s just one of many issues on which candidates differ.

Tomorrow (Wed) night some Wesleyan student groups have set up PAC 001 so that the campus community can watch the presidential debate from 9-10:30pm. Usdan will also have snacks and debate in the café area.

If you plan to vote in Connecticut and haven’t registered yet, there’s still time to register. The website of CT’s Secretary of State has all the information you need.

It’s election season. Participate in the process: listen, discuss. And then let’s turn out to vote!

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Read @adamkirsch1 on #PhilipRoth “a dangerous writer, one to wrestle with and argue about, not to calmly praise...the books will always be there like sticks of dynamite, ready to blow up complacency and moralism. The books are still alive.” theatlantic.com/entertainment/…

RIP #PhilipRoth “Literature isn’t a moral beauty contest. Its power arises from the authority and audacity with which the impersonation is pulled off; the belief it inspires is what counts.” via @NYTimesnytimes.com/2018/05/22/obi…

What an incredible battle! Couldn't be more proud of our team for the fight, grit, and tenacity they showed. Tough, tough loss...but we'll be back! Thanks to all who followed along this season. #RollCards#proud

Read lovely review of @AmyBloomBooks "In Bloom’s eloquent telling, the love these two women had for each other mattered, and lasted, in a significant way. As Hick puts it, “Eleanor’s body is the landscape of my true home.” nyti.ms/2Ggp1QJ